Posted on Jul 5, 2006

We’re wondering about the term itself: Like “perfect storm” and “tipping point,” has the phrase “inconvenient truth” become the new way to describe any set of facts that is getting short shrift in the public arena?

We’re wondering because we’ve seen it around a lot, most recently in George Lakoff’s column on the Huffington Post, “Occupation: The Inconvenient Truth About Iraq.”

Are there other examples? Have Al Gore’s publicity efforts, the public’s growing unease about climate change, and a piece of evocative language combined in a perfect storm that has pushed past the tipping point the term “inconvenient truth”?

I want to hear from you, Truthdig readers….

Blair Golson is Truthdig’s managing editor.

From the Huffington Post

George Lakoff’s use of the term “inconvenient truth” appears to be in the advance guard of a slew of inconvenient truths soon to blanket America.